“Shāshwat”

Live Tonight on Millennium Stage:
Sawani Mudgal & Khushal Sharma – Hindustani Vocal
Sibasankar Satapathy – Tabla & Mardal
Sujith Naik – Flute
“Shāshwat”—Eternal. Such are the music and values of the legendary musician Pandit Kumar Gandharva. An offering of music to the musical genius for the milestone of his birth centenary, Shāshwat celebrates Gandharva’s exemplary life and musical legacy.
Pandit Kumar Gandharva’s timeless music bridged dualities, assimilating the best from tradition and modernity, from both classical and folk traditions. Kumar-ji lives on in the hearts of disciples and rasikas, through the sheer bliss of his art.
Kumar-ji’s unique compositions are played by his prashishyas (grand-disciples): Sawani Mudgal and Khushal Sharma. Their guru, Pandit Madhup Mudgal, is a prime disciple of Pandit Kumar Gandharva, and the guru passed on a rich legacy that carries forward through them.

MWOTG Takes Kennedy Center To Church

Caught on March 2nd live on Millennium Stage at the Kennedy Center: Washington Performing Arts: Men and Women of the Gospel Choir (MWOTG) has celebrated the heritage of gospel music and its related genres with vibrant, dynamic performances in venues across the nation’s capital for 30 years. Under the leadership of Artistic Director Theodore Thorpe III, the choir is dedicated to presenting this American art form at its highest artistic level, performing contemporary and classic works of African American heritage including gospel standards, hymns, anthems, and other choral repertoire. As a resident ensemble of Washington Performing Arts, the choir has shared the stage with a wide array of artists, including Richard Smallwood, Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, the late Edwin Hawkins, the late Walter Hawkins, Ramsey Lewis, and Sweet Honey In The Rock!!

Gone to church.

Cozy Spot

The final part of this week’s proGram was an easy place to be.

Desert Song- Yosef Gutman Ft. Lionel Loueke
Tikun – Amend- Yosef Gutman Ft. Lionel Loueke


La Lucha Dura- Triad Ft. Jamey Haddad
I Put A Spell On You- Triad
Energy to the Bones- Maetar
That Maetar Sound- Maetar
Emergence- The Messthetics & James Brandon Lewis


Souls Remember- Lois Deloatch
Illusions- Jalen Ngonda
Mahal- Glass Beams
My Way- London Afrobeat Collective

The Poppin’ Out

The middle part of the proGram had SUM newness same as the oldness.

Chemical X- Julius Rodriguez
***pre-recorded conversation with Julius Rodriguez***
Actual Proof- Julius Rodriguez Ft. Cisco Swank

Concrete Dim- Daggerboard
Distant Sirens- Daggerboard
Minimalism- Ches Smith
Disco Inferred- Ches Smith
Imperial Strut- Ruben Caban Ft. Camilo Velandia, David Chiverton & Richard Bravo


Music from Prince of Persia (1993 S.N.E.S.) – II – Stage 4/Fugue- Myles Wright
Triple Play- Randy Napoleon
Lo-Jo- Yotam Silberstein Ft. George Coleman
Gloria’s Step- Michael Wolff, Leon Lee Dorsey and Mike Clark

Grownin

The first part of this week’s proGram was a little pout of season, but fine to be.

Tongues We Think In- Thollem
***pre-recorded conversation with Thollem***


Impala- Gordon Grdina & Christian Lillinger
Qalander- Gordon Grdina
The Scene Is Clean- Mamiko Watanabe Ft. Santi DeBriano & Billy Hart
Atomic Space- Mamiko Watanabe Ft. Santi DeBriano & Billy Hart


Sketches- Lawrence Fields
Yasorey- Lawrence Fields
Bridge Over Troubled Water- Mike LeDonne
Genesis- Mike LeDonne


Arch- Vijay Iyer, Linda May Han Oh & Tyshawn Sorey
Ghostrumental- Vijay Iyer, Linda May Han Oh & Tyshawn Sorey

In The Play Circle With Julius Rodriguez

25-year-old Julius Rodriguez dares to imagine a future of new standards and sonic excitement, which has earned him a reputation of an “interesting, fresh sound” (NPR Music). His versatility as an artist has led to a variety of unique projects: he played organ for Me’shell Ndegeocello and the hip-hop production duo Brasstracks; played piano on Carmen Lundy’s Grammy-nominated vocals album, Modern Ancestors; contributed to recordings for artists such as Morgan Guerin & friend of the proGram Kassa Overall; and led his own jazz group in clubs around New York. Having studied jazz since childhood, attending its prominent youth programs & learning institutions while developing a playing dexterity and a composer’s ear for its blues/spirituals, and ballad-related cornerstones, Julius recognizes jazz’s cultural value and the processes that further its prestige as America’s classical music. His music dares to imagine a future of new standards & sonic excitement. This vanguard was raised in an atmosphere where pop & hip-hop & dance influenced their approaches to melody & harmony & rhythm, so no doubt it is part of their improvisational DNA. Alongside jazz, Stevie Wonder and the Beatles were always around the Rodriguez family stereo; and as Julius devoured the Internet for musical discoveries, he heard jazz pianists like Jacky Terrason & The Bad Plus’ Ethan Iverson spin their own version of contemporary repertoire, pop & otherwise. He started listening to James Blake, Sampha & Solange; and at the Masters School, began participating in an annual concert students would produce by recreating a classic album, learning everything about Michael Jackson’s Thriller & U2’s Joshua Tree. His jazz professors also encouraged him to keep stretching out, as that was when he was introduced to Shuggie Otis. Rodriguez was always playing with singer-songwriters and other musicians outside his youth jazz circles. When he got to Juilliard, he began playing with music students from other New York universities; and with his old friend Isaiah Barr’s Onyx Collective, whose Lower East Side reputation as a young group equally comfortable with indie-rock and hip-hop, with standards & rare grooves, made fans of downtown jazzers like Roy Nathanson & Marc Ribot, but also A$AP Rocky. (The platinum rapper hired them as his band on a 2018 tour, which made Julius take a semester off of Juilliard and precipitated his leaving school). By early 2019, the breadth of Julius’ work pointed towards eclecticism: he played organ for Me’shell Ndegeocello and the hip-hop production duo Brasstracks; piano on Carmen Lundy’s Grammy-nominated vocals album, Modern Ancestors; contributed to recordings by other top of the line non-traditionalists; and led his own jazz group in clubs around town. Additionally, his working musician acumen was getting sharper. Even within the jazz community, he’d recognize how clubs and their patrons differentiated the music. Everything kept growing in the way he thought of, and made music.

I had the honor of catching up with multi-instrumentalist and mulit-genrelist, Julius Rodriguez (Orange Julius) ahead of the March 14the event in Madison at the Wisconsin Union Theater’s Play Circle. Orange Julius helps me to put words into what could be going on on the stage with and for us doing this event. It is a wide array of everything form both what he will be playing for instruments but also stylist, where the music will be taking us along for the journey. He mentions how the big part of that shared energy of a crowd is really important to him and how they band works the room. We talk about how he developed such an eclectic spirit and how he uses technology to help create albums that show off the ‘what’ that can happen with the tools we are lucky to have. It’s not only the music, but it is the people he gets to associate with and create together with. We talk about the track ‘Gift Of The Moon’ in both senses of a visual experience and a sonic exploration. But the best time for me is when we talk about where he is at as he gets deep into a tune, or a moment and that went well with our discussion about working with Kassa Overall. Before we let him go, Orange Julius builds a setlist and once again, he would be given the keys to the kingdom and well enjoyed by the listeners.